Martin Deschamps

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Martin Deschamps (June 23, 1970—)[1] is a Canadian rock singer from Quebec. He records and performs both as a solo artist and as the lead vocalist for the reunited Offenbach.

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[edit] Young age

By the age of 9, his family moved to Rawdon, Québec. During his youth, his handicap wasn't mocked in school, instead he bacame popular especially because he was friend with one of the coolest guy in his elementary school. He was entertaning his student friends in class although he maintained good grades also being the first of his class.[1]

He started playing the drums when he reached 11 years of age and by the age of 15 he was playing bass guitar and started singing. From 1989 to 1995 he would be a graphic designer for Bell company. The first band in which he played was called Any Way and he was their drum player. Knowing he wanted to become a band leader, he formed his own group called Deep Freeze.[1]

[edit] Career debut

His musical career began in 1996 with that group, when he was named best vocalist in the L'Empire des futures stars competition. He was subsequently invited to join Offenbach on a reunion tour as the replacement for the late Gerry Boulet, and immediately departed on a 50-show tour. He then released his own solo debut, Comme je suis, in 2000. Selling 60,000 copies in Quebec, the album spawned three hit singles and was nominated for three Félix Awards, for best new artist, best rock album and best single ("Quand").

Deschamps was born with congenital deformities of all four limbs; he is missing both his left arm and right leg, and has only two fingers on his right hand. For his second album, 2001's Différent, he donated a portion of the profits to Montreal's Centre hospitalier universitaire Sainte-Justine, and subsequently became a spokesperson for the province's Semaine des personnes handicapées.

He subsequently recorded two songs for the soundtrack to Denise Filiatrault's film L'Odyssée d'Alice Tremblay and a duet with Lynda Lemay, and mounted a successful concert tour in France.

His third album, Le Désert, was released in 2003. That album's single "Vérité" spent five weeks at #1 on Quebec's pop charts.

Offenbach subsequently released the album Nature in 2005, and Deschamps toured with the band that year.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c Martin Deschamps - Reportage. Radio-Canada.ca. Retrieved on 2006-08-06.

[edit] External links